ONE OF MANHATTAN’S BEST KEPT SECRETS The Heather Garden in Fort Tryon Park is among New York’s most diverse four-season gardens and features one of the largest heath and heather collections on the East Coast. The largest public garden with unrestricted access in New York City, the Garden’s three acres are home to more than 500 different varieties of trees, shrubs, and perennials, including dozens of varieties of heaths and heathers, all providing color, texture, and interest in every season. Changing selections of colorful annuals add to the Garden’s romantic exuberance. Originally designed by the Olmsted Brothers in 1935 for John D. Rockefeller, Jr. and renovated twice since then, this historic garden boasts THE year-round horticultural and scenic interest, with spectacular views of the Hudson River and the Palisades. HEATHER Over the decades, the Greenacre Foundation has continuously funded additional horticultural staff, supplies, equipment, and plants to complement the resources of NYC Parks and the Fort Tryon Park Trust. GARDEN Through its successful public-private partnership, NYC Parks and the Trust are working together to maintain and sustain Fort Tryon Park for another 75 years and beyond. Fort Tryon Park Manhattan The botanical diversity of the Heather Garden attracts birds, butterflies, and other beneficial wildlife and insects. HISTORY A GIFT TO THE CITY OF NEW YORK Fort Tryon Park is a city, state, and federal scenic landmark gifted to the City in 1935 by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., who believed that no place in Manhattan offered as much natural beauty as the 67 acres that today comprise Fort Tryon Park. Rockefeller acquired the property to develop as a public park, purchased the land across the river (the New Jersey Palisades) to protect the views, and engaged the Olmsted Brothers—whose father designed Central Park—to design the park and gardens. In 2010, on the 75th anniversary of the Park’s opening, David Rockefeller renewed his father’s generous legacy with a $1 million gift to the Fort Tryon Park Trust, NYC Parks’ non-profit partner for the park. RESTORATIONS & REINVIGORATION After several decades of splendor, park maintenance declined precipitously during the fiscal crisis of the 1970s. In 1983, the Greenacre Foundation funded the Landscape Restoration Plan that brought Fort Tryon Park back to life. Executed by NYC Parks and the landscape architectural firm Quennell Rothschild & Partners, working closely with horticulturist Timothy Steinhoff, the restoration adhered to the Olmsted Brothers’ 1935 plan, which still guides the work of the horticultural staff today. In 2009, prior to the Park’s 75th anniversary, the Fort Tryon Park Trust engaged public garden designers Lynden B. Miller and Ronda M. Brands to reinvigorate the planting design and develop a Framework Plan for enhancing and sustaining the Heather Garden for the long term. Miller and Brands built upon the unique horticultural, historic, and scenic assets of the Heather Garden while preserving the spirit of the original plan. (Top) View of the Heather Garden, Hudson River and Palisades, courtesy Olmsted Archives, 1937. (Bottom) 1980s restoration of the Heather Garden by NYC Parks, the Greenacre Foundation and Quennell Rothschild & Partners A GARDEN FOR EVERY SEASON The Garden’s reinvigoration emphasizes bold plant groupings by recreating many large, cohesive swaths of perennials, set among a structural landscape of shrubs and small trees. While flowers bloom year-round in the garden, vibrant foliage colors and textures provide contrast and additional interest in every season. Companion plants have been added to complement the Garden’s extensive collections of rhododendrons, azaleas, heaths, and heathers. The Garden’s collage of interesting plant combinations is knit together by Spring Summer the repetition of key “signature plants” for every season, providing unity throughout the Garden and helping to enhance the relationship among the perennial border, the heather bed, and the surrounding borders. ABOUT THE HEATHS AND HEATHERS Heaths (Erica species and cultivars) and heathers (Calluna vulgaris cultivars), native in their wild forms to Scotland and Ireland, require careful cultivation to flourish as they do here. NYC Parks gardeners, in cooperation with the Northeast Heather Society, have sustained heaths and heathers in Fort Tryon Park for more than three-quarters of a century with careful attention to soil cultivation, pruning, and ongoing planting. With evergreen foliage in greens, yellows, and reds throughout the year, Fall Winter some varieties turn silver, copper, red, or chocolate in winter. Heaths generally flower from mid-winter to early spring, while heathers take over the bloom sequence beginning in mid-summer. CONTACT For more information, including a monthly “What’s in Bloom” list, historic photos and plant photos, visit us at www.FortTryonParkTrust.org. To arrange a horticultural tour for your group, please contact [email protected] or call 212-795-1388 x 300. Alive with color year-round, the Garden is home to nearly 500 varieties of plants that attract butterflies, bees, birds, and other A beneficial wildlife to the city. THE PERENNIAL BORDER THE This guide highlights several signature plants in each season. Located along the eastern side of the Garden, just Detailed plant lists and bloom times can be found at www. below the Stan Michels Promenade and its stately American elms, the 600-foot-long Perennial Border FortTryonParkTrust.org. features hundreds of varieties of shrubs, small trees, HEATHER and herbaceous perennials. Old-world roses, historic azaleas, and many types of hydrangeas are among the flowering shrubs that provide year-round struc- LEGEND ture for the ever-changing tapestry of perennials. GARDEN The map shows approximate locations for several plant groupings in the Perennial and Heather Beds. Bulbs are planted throughout the B garden and are not identified by number. Enjoy looking for new Plant Guide THE HEATHER BED plants each season! Anchored by several historic yews and a massive Siberian elm at its center, this large bed features over forty varieties of heaths and heathers set amidst 1 2 3 4 =color corresponds to season and number to location on map companion plantings of perennials, shrubs, and small P =perennial S =shrub B =bulb V =vine A =annual trees, including two unusual Franklinias. The topography and plantings vary from sweeps of spp.=multiple species cvs.=cultivated varieties meadow-style plantings attractive to butterflies to rocky slopes hosting delicate alpine plants ablaze in color during early spring. TO NEW LEAF RESTAURANT & RESTROOMS STAN MICHELS PROMENADE HEDGE 19 8 19 MARGARET CORBIN CIRCLE 15 22 9 12 9 9 21 18 9 12 8 9 12 13 2 21 21 9 10 15 190th Street / A train 8 10 5 6 9 8 22 22 19 12 19 2 10 7 10 HEDGE 3 13 10 5 2 18 6 CENTER PATH 6 8 7 HEDGE 9 5 9 5 10 11 2 9 21 5 2 8 2 YEW 2 3 A 9 2 2 2 9 9 6 5 2 9 14 16 YEW 13 6 9 9 21 14 9 9 YEW YEW 16 2 8 YEW 13 BIRCH 9 7 2 10 ELM 2 16 2 2 ALLISON’S WALK 2 13 2 ROCK YEW 10 6 2 DOGWOOD ROCK SLOPE E S B N PATH TO THE CLOISTERS W HUDSON RIVER WINTER SPRING While many of fall’s flowers, berries, and colorful leaves persist into Masses of Spanish Bluebells carpet the garden amidst the vibrant the winter months, Winter Heath steals the show, turning the Heather colors of Azaleas and Rhododendrons, as perennials from Candytuft Bed into an undulating wave of pink and white from mid-winter and Catmint to Solomon’s Seal and Sage awaken and bloom. Scotch through early spring. Red Cotoneaster berries and Rose hips give way Broom, Lilacs, Flowering Quince, Daphne, and Peonies perfume the to the delicate flowers of Hellebores, delightful companions for late air, and the rock garden slope is ablaze with spring color. winter bulbs like Crocus, Snowdrops, and Daffodils. Crocus chrysanthus ‘Cream Beauty’ Erica carnea cvs. Iberis sempervirens Bergenia cordifolia Snow Crocus B 1 * Winter Heath S 2 Candytuft P 5 Pigsqueak P 6 Helleborus spp. and cvs. Galanthus nivalis Salvia x sylvestris ‘Blauhugel’ (Blue Hill) Paeonia lactiflora cvs. Hellebore P 3 Common Snowdrop B 4 * Blue Hill Meadow Sage P 7 Common Garden Peony P 8 * Bulbs 1, 4 and 17 are planted throughout the garden and are not identified by number on the map. Rhododendron spp. and cvs. Iris sibirica cv. Azaleas and Rhododendrons S 9 Siberian Iris P 10 SUMMER FALL Old-world Roses, Hydrangeas, and Spireas reach their peak, as colors shift Garden drama heightens with spectacular fall foliage colors, the glossy from the soft whites of Buttonbush, Mock Orange, and Giant Fleeceflower purple berries of Beautyberry, and sweeps of dramatic white Japanese to the deep purples and vibrant yellows of False Indigo, Butterfly Bushes, Anemone. Violet-red Autumn Crocus, bright orange Lion’s Tail, and the and Yarrow. Tropical-looking Hardy Hibiscus and showy Clematis vines spotted orchid-like blooms of Japanese Toad Lily offer surprises among mix with the hot colors of Butterfly Weed, Red Hot Poker, and Montbretia. fall stalwarts like Autumn Joy Stonecrop, Asters, and tall annual Sages. Drought-tolerant plants thrive as Heathers begin to flower. Cephalanthus occidentalis Clematis ‘Jackmanii’ Colchicum speciosum Anemone x hybrida ‘Honorine Jobert’ Buttonbush S 11 Clematis V 12 Meadow Saffron B 17 * Windflower P 18 Crocosmia ‘Lucifer’ Achillea filipendula Aconitum carmichaelii ‘Arendsii’ Leonotis leonurus Montbretia B 13 Yarrow P 14 Monkshood P 19 Lion’s Tail A 20 ** Hibiscus moscheutos Disco Belle Series Echinops ritro ‘Veitch’s Blue’ Tricyrtis hirta Callicarpa dichotoma ‘Early Amethyst’ Hardy Hibiscus P 15 Globe Thistle P 16 Japanese Toad Lily P 21 Beautyberry S 22 * * Number 20 is planted in different spots each year.
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